Is it possible to "hear" the electrons in SSD disk drives?

Is it possible to "hear" the electrons in SSD disk drives?
I bought it off some guy on kijiji, but this thing makes a lot of racket. I swear it sounds like it's spinning up, but it's not an HDD disk drive. Maybe it's a bunch of electrons getting excited and spinning in unison? I read some forum I should check the control gate, but the disk uses torx screws and my drivers are all stripped because my torx isn't as good as Phillips.

Attached: index.jpg (1200x1600, 215K)

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en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Electromagnetically_excited_acoustic_noise_and_vibration
newegg.com/p/N82E16822178340
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>s it possible to "hear" the electrons in SSD disk drives?

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do you hear your cpu doing noise?
there are a lot more electrons moving in there

>I bought it off some guy on kijiji, but this thing makes a lot of racket. I swear it sounds like it's spinning up, but it's not an HDD disk drive.

bro you got scammed. its probably a laptop sized hdd put inside a SSD casing

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Electromagnetically_excited_acoustic_noise_and_vibration

Sshd contains both a SSD and HDD... Fucking moron...

if pic is related then you're a fucking idiot

That's what I thought too

That Image you posted is a hybrid drive:

Instead of a 32/64/128MB DRAM cache, it has a 8/16/32GB NAND cache.

Works well enough after the "hot" data is migrated to the SSD portion, but it doesn't last nearly as long as either a straight-up SSD or HDD.

According to Newegg, st1000lm014 is this product newegg.com/p/N82E16822178340

it's got an 8GB "SSD" cache.